boredom and watching it rise, of wanting a coat, of running past the empty

steel plant along the twelfth street tracks and being struck by the broken

glassed emptiness, that space like a burnt-out cathedral, and falling to my

knees, empty as the space where men once worked the machines, the

absent space of voices.

~

Do you ever hear them, Sasha asks. Who? The voices of men

or my lovers? All of them! She says, the swirling voices, the ones that rise

off the train or the lake at dusk? The ones from inside you. The lost

voices. Or are they ever lost?

Smoke faded into the black seam. Or are they arc-welded?

Voices weeping, voices going blind, trying to read the Brailed air

in the gray light the voices of men, hard to decipher, speaking

into their gloved hands, waiting in a doorway in the rain to hear about

work.

~

Sasha, I don’t hear the voices of those violent rooms, perhaps you are right. Though I do hear the voices of the stories my lover tells me, the mother of my child, she who has left graffiti across town. I see her with her own ex lover, cutting the chain link fence to the closed down Paper Mill, making friends with the abandoned pitt bull, cutting the copper wire to sell for scrap. I hear her hand writing the bad checks, her nights running dope, I rub these voices from her skin until they become just stories she tells, until even they become nothing more than once I did that, this, old paint, varnished over, hidden with distance till they become part

of the gone worlds we inhabit, only when the voices return when we are alone.

Sasha says, my voices come to me at night. That is when you hear me dance. I wear the headphones and dance with my eyes closed. That is why the sound of my feet is silent.

~

They become part of you, no? Sasha asks.

Is that why you cannot grieve them? I puff on my cigarette.

In her hands a white blouse embroidered turquoise, the laundry

on the line fluttering in the high wind blowing off the lake, blue shawls,

white sun dresses gold hand-stitched by her mother.

The high whine of Jesus’ electric toy car whizzing

across the corner. Once, I said, when my woman left

I told her, now without you I will not become

who I was supposed to be ….

Sasha stares at me, does not say a word. But then, I tell Sasha,

I realized that is not true because in losing someone we become someone